I had great success this year raising my 4wo chicks in a kennel inside the run with my 1 and 2yo hens as soon as they no longer needed supplemental heating. After 3 weeks of this look-but-no-touch arrangement I opened the door to the kennel and let anyone go in or out. Three weeks after that we took the kennel out and everyone was a flock.
During the juveniles' containment I put the prime snacks like BOSS around the outside of their kennel drawing the hens safely into their proximity where they -- the hens -- didn't feel their food supply was jeopardized. And the juveniles, of course, got the same snacks inside their kennel.
Won't say, now that everyone's in the same general population, that the juveniles don't get chased off the prime snacks but there hasn't been any blood and when I'm working nearby in the garden I don't hear any fuss. Meanwhile, they're growing bigger and stronger so they're getting a good food supply even if it's the leftovers of the BOSS and watermelon.
It's been a highly successful integration. Even our Mean Girl who was very hard to break last integration hasn't gotten her feathers in a twist.
This is the sort of wire kennel we used:
An excellent investment!
During the juveniles' containment I put the prime snacks like BOSS around the outside of their kennel drawing the hens safely into their proximity where they -- the hens -- didn't feel their food supply was jeopardized. And the juveniles, of course, got the same snacks inside their kennel.
Won't say, now that everyone's in the same general population, that the juveniles don't get chased off the prime snacks but there hasn't been any blood and when I'm working nearby in the garden I don't hear any fuss. Meanwhile, they're growing bigger and stronger so they're getting a good food supply even if it's the leftovers of the BOSS and watermelon.
It's been a highly successful integration. Even our Mean Girl who was very hard to break last integration hasn't gotten her feathers in a twist.
This is the sort of wire kennel we used:
